The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1964-05-14, Page 6FIFTEEN
MINUS THIRTEEN
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Page 6 Titne-Aclyeot.0, May 14, 1.964 follows..brothees.. tracks? Report winners.
in Lucan event
Offered two, pro ..trials , , ..••,
,t1 u g ht r„ father son howliug:
tournament wa,p 401,0 this past
A ,Cp.M.hi net i pn „iriptherl,
Week at the L u PAP Pewiing.
Bill chipo4se, is, Hensall„ Lanes.
.4E7171. TALK ,SPORTS
By Opp 4'Beepl" Gravett
who played centre ice for the Winners of the mother- C entralia golfers ..,,,,,,,,,,. Q9411:OPP,QUA daughter tournament were al.
junior "D" gnarl-1149PS has re,, follows; . . .,.. . ! ceiVed word to report for Or-
stage firs event. ' t outs wit h Detroit 40 Wings 41 1Daughte r tocler 4, high
lia41119 131,t9erlil t4T0,,AtogggP9stt,p, TA491,94444 ge and triple, Ii9iPti ship,
way; 0Yer 12 ,, high single and
with the Maple Le4P Paoli)!
triple,Elizaheth ,Arrand, moth-
er, high single, Mrs. Cecil
Lewis; high triple, MrS!, Ivan
Hearn; high pair, mr. Arrand
and Elizabeth Arraao,
Fataor-son winners were;
sons under 12, high single and
triple, Brian Ankers; over 12,
high single and triple, K e ii
Ready,
Bill, who -
tends Central
Huron Second-
ary School, Clin-
ton, played With.
Hensall midgets
until they were
eliminated, and
then moved up to
the junior ranks. Fathers, high s i n gip and
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. triple, Earl Carling; high pair,
Ernest Chipchase. Earl Carling and Leslie Car-
A brother, Jack, plays de- ling.
Low net honors were shared
by S/L Reid, F/L 1-13TPS and
Sgt. Hopley. After a sudden-
.death playoff, SO, Hopley emerr
ged as the individual Winner
with a 197/ net of '0.
Ross Burns is leading for the
Canadian Air Force Memorial
Trophy which will be presented
at the end of the season. This
trophy goes to the golfer who
has the best low net score for
both the opening and closing
tournaments of the year.
W/C William Bracken, acting CO at RCAF Centralia, tees off to open the "Early Bird" golf tourna-
ment held recently at Grand Bend's 0a.kwoed layout. Watching from the left are: F/S A. W, Piper,
S/L T. Reid, F/O T. Mansell, Cpl. J. Cameron, F/S M. Saper, Sgt. A. Hopley and F/L R. Burns.
Burns won the low gross and Hopley copped low net honors. --T-A photo
fence with the Toronto Marl-
boros, who won the Memorial
Cup last week, emblematic of
Junior "A" supremacy.
Pair tie for honors
in Exeter tourney
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GRAND BEND
Some forty-three golfers
from RCAF Centralia partici-
pated in the station's opening
"Early-Bird" tournament held
at the Oakwood Inn Golf Course,
Grand Bend, last weekend.
Low Gross honor was won by
Ross Burns who fired a nifty
VI over the 18-hole layout:
Sgt. Hopley holds the lead
for the Dufferin Hotel Challenge
Cup "Pin" which is a handicap
challenge and played for
throughout the season with the
eventual winner recording the
most wins.
Teeing off ceremonies were
staged by W/C Bracken, acting
C.O.
In eharge of the tournament,
prizes and entertainment were;
F/S A. W. Piper, S/L T. Reid,
F/O T. Mansell, Cpl. J. Cam-
eron, F/S M. Soper, Sgt. A.
Hopley and F/L R. Burns.
The club has about 50 mem-
bers so far. F/L Stan Thorne
is chairman.
sary to be a member of the
Golf course to become a quali-
fied member of the Men's club.
The registration fee is only
$1 and may be paid to Mr.
Weber, Mr. Hinton or Mr. Ailey.
The first four-ball foursome
tournament of the season took
place at the Exeter Golf Club
this week.
A total of 16 golfers—four
foursomes—participated in the
event.
Individual prizes went to the
following:
Low Gross, Harry Ailey and
Lloyd Cushman, 40 (tie); Helen
Burton, 43; second, Jean Tay-
lor, 50;
Hidden hole winners, 1 o w
scores, Ethel Ailey, Wally Bur-
ton; high scores, Betty Coates
and Red Fairley.
Gerry Cooper won the door
prize draw.
Wins go-cart event at Fanshawe
Area public school Inspector, Gil Burrows, hogs the inside line as he leads the pack in one of the
events at the go-cart races staged at Fanshawe, Saturday. For further details see Boom's column.
--Pitman photo
Hensall group
to plan sports
A minor athletic association
was established at a meeting
of the Hensall recreation com-
mittee Monday night.
P. L. McNaughton was elected
president of the organization.
Other officers are: Edward
Corbett, vice-president; Robert
Reaburn, secretary; Douglas
Johnson, treasurer; John Heal,
chairman.
Projects will be discussed at
a later meeting.
ORGANIZE MEN'S CLUB
Male golfers at the Exeter
Golf Club have organized a new
men's club.
President of the association
is Dick Webber. Hal Hinton is
secretary-treasurer and Harry
Ailey, tournament handicapper.
All male members and non-
members of the Exeter Golf
Club may join the newly-formed
Men's Golf Club. It is not neces-
It's tremendously surprising the amount of
interest the American and. National Baseball
Leagues have on people these days. Not too long
ago, I can remember when I first initiated the
major league predictions through this newspaper
and many people couldn't tell you the names of
the clubs in either league. Now they are turning
out to be real experts on the matter,
I was amazed at the amount of ground-
work our ol' buddy Ross Haugh did last week in
gaining various sources of information as to the
Way the 'teams and individual stars would finish
out the 1964 campaign.
I didn't know Ross was a psychologist! A
stalwart Tiger fan for many years, he must have
really used his ingenuity to have so many people
pick the Bengals for a first place finish in the
American League. Actually, knowing Ross, the sit-
uation is easy to understand. You see, Ross is the
No. 1 Tiger manager on Canadian soil from his
office at Crediton,
Seriously though, it would be nice to see
the Tigers finish first, But we are afraid this
thought is just an illusion. As Gerry Smith noted
the other day while we were getting our ears
lifted, announcer Jimmy Dudley of the Cleveland
Indians spent a very disappointing weekend. To
bring you up to date, the Indians were in first
place. Then the Yankees came to town. Three
days later, the Tribe suffered four straight losses
to move them out of the top rung.
In the American League, the Yankees
have too much power. They're something like the
Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey
League. They operate strongly by the notation
on top of their contracts — "If you can't beat
them, buy them!"
So the Yankees get our first place nod,
followed by Minnesota, Baltimore, Cleveland, De-
troit and Washington. (Sorry Ross!)
In the National, the law of averages fa-
vors the Giants with L.A. a close second. We like
the St. Louis Cards for the number three slot.
Philadelphia will make a "whizz-kid" comeback
and finish fourth while the pesky Cincinnati Red
Legs will round out the top five.
Individual home run honors should be
gathered by Mantle and the "sey-hey kid" of the
Giants. Batting titles could go to Boston's Carl
Yastrzernsld and Ken Aspromonte of the Houston
Colts. In the pitching division, Yankee's lanky Jim
Bouton will reign as chief with 24 victories. Na-
tional League's Jim Bunning will make the Tigers
sorry they traded him. Amen!
view, third; Peterborough,
fourth; London fifth; Toronto
Danforth, sixth; Toronto Uni-
versity Settlement, seventh.
Don MacCauley of the Cen-
tralia team was voted the most
outstanding player of the tour-
nament.
Volleyball crew
win Ontario title
RCAF Centralia continued
their winning ways in the volley-
ball division on Saturday when
they thumped defending cham-
pion Toronto Eastview 21-10 in
a sudden-death final to win the
Ontario Senior "B" Volleyball
championship.
The local RCAF squad won
11 of their 14 games to win the
title. Canadian Volleyball As-
sociation President, Antor
Fairlani, Scarborough, presen-
ted team captain George Kelly
with the championship trophy.
The Centralia club is com-
prised of Al Wiper, Tom Reid,
Don MacCaulay, Jack Wong,
Tom Burke, Dave McPhee and
Captain George Kelly.
The championship was the
second in two months for RCAF
Centralia as they won the Can-
adian Air Force title in April.
Final standings for the day-
long event were: RCAF Cen-
tralia, first; Toronto Central
"Y", secend; Toronto East-
GO-CART RACING A THRILLING ACTIVITY!
Many people in Exeter and throughout the
district may not realize it, but we have a "Go-
Cart" racing star in our midst. He is none other
than Gil Burrows, local public school inspector.
Last Saturday afternoon, Gil, Len Hume
and a young fellow by the name of Bob Southcott
journeyed to Fans'hawe to participate in some go-
cart racing. Actually, Gil was the mastermind be-
hind the adventure but Len and Bob went along
as the pitmen to handle the mechanical end of
things. (oh my!)
Gil won the first race by overtaking the
lead car in the third lap. He held the winning
position for the balance of the ten-lap event. In
the second race, Gil was put in the fourth and
last tier starting position. Yes you guessed it. Our
adventurers finished out of the money in this
one.
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However, Gil provided his enthusiastic pit-
man with many thrills in the third race. The
school inspector really "turned on the coal" and
had moved into second position when a sad ex-
perience took place. Just when he was moving
into a first place challenge, the motor conked
out!
Win everything in sight in loop
The Hootenannies won both major trophies in the Ladies' Friday night loop and received their
awards at a banquet at the Village Inn last Wednesday. Standing from the left are: Eleanor Blom-
maert, Marg Triebner, Bernice Thompson, Martha Snelling and Doris Dobson. The latter also won
the loop's high average. Seated are: Mary Gunderson, June Campbell and Barb Fahner.--T-A photo
According to Robert, "Gil combines a
heavy foot and lots of know-how at the game".
Gil actually does his own mechanical work and
directed Len Hume and Robert in a fast head
change between the second and third races.
By the way, in case you are wondering
about the mechanical failure, Gil didn't fire his
pitmen aces, Len and Robert. The cart that
conked out on Gil during the third race was a
borrowed specimen. Why was it borrowed do you
ask? Well, the pitmen's repair job on the owner's
cart didn't get past the trial run. How about that!
CUFF CLEANERS—The newly organized
Exeter Men's Golf Club membership fee is $1.00
per person. It is not necessary that you own a
season's playing membership to become eligible
to join. All you have to do is pay the nominal
sum of $1,00 to participate in all male activities.
Dick Webber, Harry Ailey or Hal Hinton will
gladly accept your dollar for entry . , . Congrat-
ulations to RCAF Centralia on winning the On-
tario Senior Volleyball "8" championship on Sat-
urday See where 1-lensall's Steve Kyle is
toeing the rubber for London Diamonds, defend-
ing OBA junior champs, The local youth gave up
a run and two hits in an exhibition game this
week with London's Senior entry at Labatt Park
Plans are under way to organize the Bxeter
Men's Rec Softball League once again. Teams
should be meeting some time throughout the
week to draft their '64 schedules , . . Exeter
has entered pee wee, bantam and midget base-
ball teams in the Western Ontario Athletic As-
sociation for league play this season . , . the
fine weather (as this is written) continues, public
sthool baseball and softball leagues should be
Underway Were the end of the month,
Capture runner-up trophies
The High HopeS copped the runner-up trophy in the Friday Nighters league and are shOWn here with
some ofthe league's top Individual bowlers. Seated On the left is Mickey Bridges, high triple, While
jahe Dcalgherty, right, Copped high single, Seated between them 18 Anne Romantik, High Ropes cap-
tain: othur members of the team Standing from the left are: Barb Read, Donna Patterson, Eleanor
Campbell, Gail darter and Elsie Morley. Missing are Audrey tentley and Jean da.ndon06-T-4 photo